I think the first computer we had was a Commodore. But I don't
remember it very well, I must have been three or so. The Apple IIe, however,
I remember well. For some reason, my memories of it are intertwined with memories
of the IIgs. Most of the games we had could be played on either. My favorite
games from then were:

Little Computer People - You could play word games with
the LCP on the top floor, and feed him water from the water cooler.

Lemonade Stand - A classic game.

A two-person dueling game where you could hack the opponent's
head off with a broadsword. It fell to the ground and bounced away. Then a
little green goblin dragged your dead opponent across the stage and kicked
the head off.

Moon Patrol - I'm never good at those reflex games. But
I loved the bouncing moon buggy.

Sword of Kadash - I don't remember this well. I'm sure I
was bad at it. The sticker on the disk was shiny silver with black writing,
though. I definitely remember that!

Montezuma's Revenge - Wonderful game. Right up there with
Mario Bro's.

Mario Bro's - We had the version where you'd run around
flipping crabs over, and there was a POP button at the bottom.

Moebius - I was horrible at the dueling, but I loved the
sounds and the mystical game play. Assassins are awesome.

I learned a little BASIC on the IIgs... we had a booklet of
games you could copy in order to learn BASIC. The only things I remember were
numbering the lines, GOTO a line number, $'s deliniating variables, and END
to finish the program. On the IIgs, I played:

Ultima IV - I loved this game. I never quite finished it,
because I always feared dungeons. It was too easy to get lost and die.

Arkanoid II: The Revenge of Doh - What a fun game. I even
remember trying to make games using the editor. Other Console versions didn't
let you chose between two different levels every round.

Gnarly Golf / Zany Golf - These were great. One hole in
Gnarly Golf had a hamburger over the hole. You had to click on burger to get
it to jump and show you the hole beneath it. A hole in Zany Golf had you putting
on a logic board, past lasers.

Marble Madness - I think this game drove me crazy. It was
hard, with all the delicate mouse movements.

Back on the IIgs, we had a zterm (or zterm equivalent) program
that let us logon to local BBS's. I think we had a 1200 baud modem on the IIe,
then a 2400 baud modem with the IIgs. My brother knew the numbers for local
BBS's, and we'd call 'em. That's when I chose the handle Suneun, which is my
middle name. My sister was CRaZeD SiSTeR and my brother was Sir Cultoa. On one
BBS, I'd chat with the sysop (who had the handle Captain America), and on another
I chatted with the younger brother of one of the sysops. The kid was my age,
but I remember he typed much more slowly than I did. I learned how to touch-type
during those BBS'ing days. I was 8.

Next we got an LC III. When I was 13, I discovered BBS's again.
I found a number through a friend in middle school of Paradigm, a board run
by Steve Smith (Shadow Smith). He ran a board when I was 8, that I used to call.
Then there was a new board called Cyberlot that I began calling. The two competed
for territory. Cyberlot was almost the renegade BBS, full of younger kids. I
became friends with the Cyberlot crowd. Dark Knight was the SysOp, j-dog was
the co-Sysop. Since my parents weren't overly enthusiastic with my BBS calling,
I couldn't send Dark Knight money for an account most of the time (it was 10
cents an hour past the first 30 mins a day). Occasionally I'd sneak a $10 to
him through the mail. After a while, he let me be a Hostess for the board. I
helped people use Tele-Conference, Tele-Arena, and various other functions on
the board.

I kept calling Cyberlot for years. I don't remember what happened
at the end, whether Cyberlot went down or I just stopped calling. Some time
around early high school I started using visi.net for Internet service. In the
beginning, I think I checked e-mail once a week. By my senior year of HS, I
logged on every day and used ICQ to talk to a friend at college. During high
school we got a Umax 200 mhz.

When I went to college, I got a 233 mhz beige g3 desktop. The
game I played the most on it was probably Starcraft. Diablo and Diablo II got
some fair use as well. It's still in my bedroom, acting as a print server. Last
year (? or the year before) I bought my mom an iMac. Blueberry. It's a low-end,
but they don't need it for much. My mom websurfs many hours a day. They're aol
users because it's easier than everything else. I've been considering getting
them started on cable, but it's an aweful lot of trouble.

Now I own a 933 mhz g4 tower. It's awesome. I gave in and bought
a 20 inch LCD from Apple this year. It's very pretty. I'm happy with OS X and
I use Terminal all the time. Yey! The programs I use these days are MPlayer
OS X, Terminal, Safari, Mail, Olympus Camedia (digital camera software), and
SNES9x for nostalgia.